VEKBENACEJE 271
The so-called Spanish verbena oil is derived from a Labiate plant.
The yield of oil from the leaves varies from 0 07 to 02 per cent.
The oil has the following characters :—
Specific gravity... 0-900 to 0-920
Optical rotation... - 10° „ - 17°
Aldehydes.... 20 to 40 per cent, (rarely to 50 per cent.)
Australian verbena oil, of uncertain origin, but possibly distilled
from the same plant, has a specific gravity about 0
- 890 and an optical
rotation - 6° to - 16°.
Verbena oil is rarely soluble in either 70 or 80 per cent, alcohol.
The principal odorous constituent of the oil is citral. Theulier
1
has
identified geraniol, Z-limonene, a sesquiterpene, and a paraffin hydro-
carbon melting at 625°. Myrcene has been reported as present, but
the oil examined was probably lemon-grass and not true verbena oil.
Kerschbaum^2 has made an exhaustive examination of the genuine oil
and has isolated therefrom an aldehyde C 10 H 16 O, which he has named
verbenone, and which had the following characters:—
Specific gravity..... 0974 at 17°
Boiling-point at 16 mm.103° to 104°
Optical rotation.+66°
Refractive index.1-4995
Melting-point of semicarbazone 208° to 209°
The following results were obtained by Messrs. Eoure-Bertrand
from oils distilled in Grasse at the time of early flowering:—
From From
Leaves. Inflorescence.
Percentage yield from the fresh plant. 0*195 0'132
"DEsters.
Combined alcohols
Free alcohols
Citral.
- 14° 16' - 8° 24'
3-5 per cent. 3*2 per cent.
2-8 „ 2-5
16-5 „ 13-8
35-4 „ 29-6
The root yielded 0*014 per cent, and the stems 0'007 per cent, of
essence.
LANTANA OILS.
Lantana Gamara is a tropical plant, common in Java, Farther
India, the Philippines and New Caledonia. Bacon
3
has examined the
oil distilled from the leaves, and found it to have the following char-
acters :—
OrtO
Specific gravity at ^L 0-9132
Optical rotation at 30° + 11-5°
Refractive index at 30° 1-4913
A Java oil has been examined, which had a specific gravity 0*952
and optical rotation — 0° 24'.
Kanga 4 has examined samples distilled from the flowers and leaves
of plants grown in Farther India, and found them to have the following
characters:—
(^1) Bull. Soc. GMm., iii. 27 (1902), 1113. (^2) Bericht, 33 (1900), 886.
- Philip. Jour. 8ci.t 4 (1909), 12. 4 Arch. der. Pharm., 252 (1914), 1.